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Tomorrow's Modern Boxes in Franklin, TN
Current price: $17.99

Barnes and Noble
Tomorrow's Modern Boxes in Franklin, TN
Current price: $17.99
Loading Inventory...
Size: CD
Like
Radiohead
's
In Rainbows
before it,
Thom Yorke
Tomorrow's Modern Boxes
initially made waves not for its music but for its distribution. Announced without warning and available as a paid "bundle" via BitTorrent -- it was not the first record distributed that way but it certainly was the most prominent --
shared the same shock of the new as
, and although it's certainly written on a smaller scale than that 2007 record, it occupies a similar space within
Yorke
's extracurricular discography.
represented an emotional thaw after the chilly, amorphous
Hail to the Thief
, whereas
warms up the icy exteriors of
Eraser
.
never attempts to abandon his fixation on pre-EDM electronica -- at this point, his affection for turn-of-the-millennium intelligent dance music could almost qualify as classicist -- but there's a scuffed warmth to much of this album, with the warped waves of keyboards gently gliding into a rhythm later articulated by a loop. Such aural sleights of hand never call attention to themselves but neither does the album as a whole.
is deliberately underwhelming, an old-fashioned grower that doesn't startle upon first listen but rather slowly unfolds. Even then, the album is stubbornly subtle, with
exploring the space between gaps, not the chasm itself. Less charitable listeners could call it mood music and they wouldn't be wrong, because
and producer
Nigel Godrich
are so controlled, they offer variations of a theme instead of a wide palette. This is not dissimilar to
, but instead of wallowing in alienation,
has found comfort within it on
and the difference is palpable. ~ Stephen Thomas Erlewine
Radiohead
's
In Rainbows
before it,
Thom Yorke
Tomorrow's Modern Boxes
initially made waves not for its music but for its distribution. Announced without warning and available as a paid "bundle" via BitTorrent -- it was not the first record distributed that way but it certainly was the most prominent --
shared the same shock of the new as
, and although it's certainly written on a smaller scale than that 2007 record, it occupies a similar space within
Yorke
's extracurricular discography.
represented an emotional thaw after the chilly, amorphous
Hail to the Thief
, whereas
warms up the icy exteriors of
Eraser
.
never attempts to abandon his fixation on pre-EDM electronica -- at this point, his affection for turn-of-the-millennium intelligent dance music could almost qualify as classicist -- but there's a scuffed warmth to much of this album, with the warped waves of keyboards gently gliding into a rhythm later articulated by a loop. Such aural sleights of hand never call attention to themselves but neither does the album as a whole.
is deliberately underwhelming, an old-fashioned grower that doesn't startle upon first listen but rather slowly unfolds. Even then, the album is stubbornly subtle, with
exploring the space between gaps, not the chasm itself. Less charitable listeners could call it mood music and they wouldn't be wrong, because
and producer
Nigel Godrich
are so controlled, they offer variations of a theme instead of a wide palette. This is not dissimilar to
, but instead of wallowing in alienation,
has found comfort within it on
and the difference is palpable. ~ Stephen Thomas Erlewine
Like
Radiohead
's
In Rainbows
before it,
Thom Yorke
Tomorrow's Modern Boxes
initially made waves not for its music but for its distribution. Announced without warning and available as a paid "bundle" via BitTorrent -- it was not the first record distributed that way but it certainly was the most prominent --
shared the same shock of the new as
, and although it's certainly written on a smaller scale than that 2007 record, it occupies a similar space within
Yorke
's extracurricular discography.
represented an emotional thaw after the chilly, amorphous
Hail to the Thief
, whereas
warms up the icy exteriors of
Eraser
.
never attempts to abandon his fixation on pre-EDM electronica -- at this point, his affection for turn-of-the-millennium intelligent dance music could almost qualify as classicist -- but there's a scuffed warmth to much of this album, with the warped waves of keyboards gently gliding into a rhythm later articulated by a loop. Such aural sleights of hand never call attention to themselves but neither does the album as a whole.
is deliberately underwhelming, an old-fashioned grower that doesn't startle upon first listen but rather slowly unfolds. Even then, the album is stubbornly subtle, with
exploring the space between gaps, not the chasm itself. Less charitable listeners could call it mood music and they wouldn't be wrong, because
and producer
Nigel Godrich
are so controlled, they offer variations of a theme instead of a wide palette. This is not dissimilar to
, but instead of wallowing in alienation,
has found comfort within it on
and the difference is palpable. ~ Stephen Thomas Erlewine
Radiohead
's
In Rainbows
before it,
Thom Yorke
Tomorrow's Modern Boxes
initially made waves not for its music but for its distribution. Announced without warning and available as a paid "bundle" via BitTorrent -- it was not the first record distributed that way but it certainly was the most prominent --
shared the same shock of the new as
, and although it's certainly written on a smaller scale than that 2007 record, it occupies a similar space within
Yorke
's extracurricular discography.
represented an emotional thaw after the chilly, amorphous
Hail to the Thief
, whereas
warms up the icy exteriors of
Eraser
.
never attempts to abandon his fixation on pre-EDM electronica -- at this point, his affection for turn-of-the-millennium intelligent dance music could almost qualify as classicist -- but there's a scuffed warmth to much of this album, with the warped waves of keyboards gently gliding into a rhythm later articulated by a loop. Such aural sleights of hand never call attention to themselves but neither does the album as a whole.
is deliberately underwhelming, an old-fashioned grower that doesn't startle upon first listen but rather slowly unfolds. Even then, the album is stubbornly subtle, with
exploring the space between gaps, not the chasm itself. Less charitable listeners could call it mood music and they wouldn't be wrong, because
and producer
Nigel Godrich
are so controlled, they offer variations of a theme instead of a wide palette. This is not dissimilar to
, but instead of wallowing in alienation,
has found comfort within it on
and the difference is palpable. ~ Stephen Thomas Erlewine